Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Chinese academic delegation visits Jerusalem college to explore science, technology

“This is something you don’t see anywhere else. Full-time engineering students who also spend several hours a day studying a 1,500-year-old text in small print. China has no such thing,” said one of the visitors.

The Jerusalem College of Technology hosted a delegation of senior officials from the Chengdu Science and Technology Bureau in China; here, they visit the school's Beit Midrash, August 2019. Credit: Jerusalem College of Technology.
The Jerusalem College of Technology hosted a delegation of senior officials from the Chengdu Science and Technology Bureau in China; here, they visit the school’s Beit Midrash, August 2019. Credit: Jerusalem College of Technology.

The Jerusalem College of Technology (JCT) hosted a delegation of senior officials this week from the Chengdu Science and Technology Bureau in China. The purpose of the visit was to explore potential collaborations in technology and development between JCT and academic institutions in China.

Guests met with JCT vice president Stuart Hershkowitz, together with Tami Kfir, vice president and head of the Israel Office for the Chengdu-Israel Incubator, and learned about the college’s 50-year history as one of Israel’s leading academic institutions in science and technology, as well as its flagship areas of research and development.

Delegation members made a stop at the Beit Midrash and saw hundreds of students studying Talmud.

One of the visitors expressed admiration: “This is something you don’t see anywhere else. Full-time engineering students who also spend several hours a day studying a 1,500-year-old text in small print. China has no such thing. I heard that studying the Talmud develops the brain and wonder if it helps students when they are immersed in their engineering and tech studies.”

“Shmuel Ben Ezra is known for innovative thinking and has deep familiarity with the fields of security and technology,” said Israel’s prime minister.
Another soldier was severely wounded and two additional soldiers were lightly wounded in the incident in which Staff Sgt. Adam Tzarfati fell.
The figure was up from 116 vessels redirected on Saturday.
Body cam and drone footage show the first moments the IDF arrived at the strategic mountain ridge in southeastern Lebanon.
“These vile attempts to harm us will only strengthen our hold on the land,” said Yesha Council head Yisrael Ganz.
“If I didn’t tell their stories, they’d be lost,” says M.R. Manheim, whose debut book chronicles the lives of his father and two uncles—three Jewish brothers from Philadelphia who served in active combat.